Not sure if attachments work via this list, but I'm attaching a PDF of the 3.4 GHz Bay Area Data Network I helped build in 2012.
This was all Rocket M3's. (I used to be KI6TWT then)
It was myself and a few friends from the Bay Area Microwave weak-signal group that helped Bay Net put this together.
We found the Rocket M3's on eBay, and we bought new sector antennas, shield kits and dishes as needed.
The Emcomm groups were all focussed on HSMM and building 2.4GHZ mesh. It was early and they hadn't yet realized how poorly a mesh network performs.
They found our 3.4GHz project unappealing because they worried that our central site with the sectors could fail.
Questions I saw earlier in the thread..
GPS. The versions of Rocket M3 we had were before GPS sync was available.
There are later versions with GPS. We were cheap and buying used/second hand M3's that were intended for International use. I have no experience with the GPS rocket M3.
Standards/Standardization..
I applaud HamWan for it's standards, and the last thing I would want to see is massively increased technical debt due to one-off deployments.
There are UBNT pci radio cards for 3.4 GHz. Maybe we run those cards in Mikrotik routerboards to keep the OS the same.
Seattle ACS Sites/Seattle ACS Link?
In this case, the two sites in question are Seattle ACS sites (Both are Seattle housing authority buildings which Seattle ACS formally has an MOU for using the sites)
Perhaps we build and maintain the non-standard link between Capital Park and Beacon as a Seattle ACS Project?? (Using the COMT people Doug identified)
Then we provide HamWAN an Ethernet VLAN across the link which joins the Capital Park and Beacon HamWAN routers?
From HamWAN's perspective, it's a PtP Ethernet circuit that you run a /30 and OSPF over. You call Seattle ACS when it fails, We fix.
Bart's 3GHz Link to Haystack..
I'd be afraid that we wouldn't be able to GPS sync the Rocket M3's with your planned equipment for Haystack.
Similarly, if we deployed XP3 cards in Mikrotiks, also no sync.
Haystack is an important site, and 3GHz makes a lot of sense for that distance up to Haystack - I don't want to impede that.
The Capital Park and Beacon sites could easily work on 10GHz.
I suspect we could make a path work on 24GHz, but I worry about rain fade with 24GHz.
The Beacon to EOC like is about as far as I would want to trust 24 GHz (1.7km)
-Randy
W3RWN